I don't know why people aren't skeptical of whether Homer wrote the Iliad, or whether the Dialogues attributed to Plato came from him. Or that Ceasar wrote The Conquest of Gaul. Why not be consistent and doubt everything?
Edit: Why not doubt everything old, that is.
It gets even better when you consider that the earliest manuscript of
The Iliad we have is dated at a MUCH longer time after Homer than the second-century manuscripts after the time of Christ.
And, as for the claims about "most scholars" and "modern scholars"...it's worth noting that such scholars tend to possess certain presuppositions, of anti-supernaturalism among others.
Also...it is fallacious, in a "bandwagon" manner, to assume that the majority opinion is inherently correct. Literary analysis, like any science, is constantly revising of
itself--in its methods, as well as its conclusions. Just as the general consensus centuries ago had been that the world was flat...so general consensus does not truth make in literary analysis, either.
It is worth noting that C.S. Lewis had at one time been a commited atheist...and literary critic and analyst, as well.
It is also worth noting that of the 12 original apostles, 11 were put to death by the Roman government, and one--John--was sent into exile after being tortured.
For all the talk about allegory and revisionism--who would be willing to die by the manners of execution used by Rome...if their claims about Christ--which were
precisely what pissed off the Emperor--were false? All they had to do was renounce those claims...and they's have been allowed to go on with they're lives. And yet they didn't.
On another note...
Chris, you claimed that the Solomon story was allegorical. I would like to know who proposed that theory, and a possible link to his/her/their reasoning.
I don't know why people aren't skeptical of whether Homer wrote the Iliad, or whether the Dialogues attributed to Plato came from him. Or that Ceasar wrote The Conquest of Gaul. Why not be consistent and doubt everything?
Edit: Why not doubt everything old, that is.
People are skeptical. Ever read an article on who wrote Shakespeare's plays? It comes up rather less often because no one is attempting to dictate public policy based on the inerrancy and complete literal truth of the Iliad. Likewise, no one would argue that all those books are worthless as literary or philosophical works unless every word of them actually happened, as in that Lewis quote mentioned a while back.
As a Christian, I find the notion that "love one another as I have loved you" would become a bad idea if it was said by someone who just claimed to be the Son of God instead of actually being the Son of God to be repugnant. Christian ideals should be able to stand on their own merits, rather than only applying because of who or what espoused them. If that were the case, it makes faith, hope, and love the cosmic equivalent of going shopping with your wife so she'll put out, a means to an end to be cynically exploited, rather than worthy acts in and of themselves.
Christian ideals, in fact, actually disprove the alternatives Lewis proposed (that Jesus was nutso, or that he was evil). Neither a nutcase nor a monsterous deciever could
ever have constructed so beautifully one of the most influential and time-tested moral codes in history.
There are two choices we face,
if we accept 1) that Jesus
did make the claims the New Testament records him as having made*, and 2) that those claims were not true.
Either he knew his claims were false, or he did not.
If he knew those claims were false, than he would be a lying con artist--therefore, a hypocrite (he constantly emphasized honesty and a clean conscience); and a monster (convincing people to put their trust in him as the Way, Truth, and Life); and, in the end, a total
idiot (it was these claims which led to his execution).
If he did not know the claims were false...than there was something wrong with his head--and therefore, he was
not a credible source for any kind of teaching, moral or otherwise.
*(As far as "the majority of 'modern' scholars" seem to be concerned, that's a big "if". But again--majority vote does not truth make. If it did...
Star Trek was not a television series worth watching, because the ratings were so low.)